Tag: Stolen (Page 4 of 4)

ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK’s 30 SONGS OF 2018

2018 was a year of good songs rather than good albums, with many of long players not as consistent or as of high a standard as the bumper crop from the Class of ’17.

However, ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK had plenty of material to choose from for its 30 SONGS OF 2018 and for obvious reasons, cannot include everything that was in this year’s shortlist…

So worthy mentions go to ANI GLASS, BLACK NAIL CABARET, BRÜCKEN FROESE, DANA JEAN PHOENIX, DISQO VOLANTE, DUBSTAR, EKKOES, FAKE TEAK, FRAGRANCE, THE FRIXION, GUNSHIP, HILTIPOP, IAMX, LIZETTE LIZETTE, TRAIN TO SPAIN and WITCH OF THE VALE. Interestingly, three graduates from the ‘Some Bizarre Album’ made it into the final list, thus highlighting the longevity of that particular vinyl showcase some 37 years on!

So with a restriction of one song per artist moniker, here are our 30 SONGS OF 2018 presented in alphabetical order…


AFTERHERE Breaking Rules

AFTERHERE is the brand new project of HEAVEN 17 singer Glenn Gregory and live keyboardist Berenice Scott, but with their roles reversed. Exploring their inner GOLDFRAPP but in a funkier vein, with groovy reminisces of ‘Twist’ and ‘Yes Sir’, the song seductively boasted a captivating sexually charged electronic energy. Berenice Scott said: “We always wanted to have a driving track on the album that you could hopefully move your feet to, party to… possibly get in a little trouble!”

Available on the AFTERHERE album ‘Addict’ via Manners McDade

https://afterhere.co.uk/wp/


JOHAN BAECKSTRÖM Utopia

While the Clarke was strong with this one, the first impression that came across with ‘Utopia’ was that things became a slight bit darker in the world of JOHAN BAECKSTRÖM. Despite that, there was a rousing chorus and percolating sequences to savour as he pointed out the futility of seeking that perfect future, when life has so much more on offer. “I wouldn´t describe the album as dark though” the DAILY PLANET synthesist helpfully added, “it´s absolutely a pop album.”

Available on the JOHAN BAECKSTRÖM album ‘Utopia’ via Progress Productions

https://www.facebook.com/bstrommusic/


BLANCMANGE Distant Storm

For BLANCMANGE, ‘Distant Storm’ was rather unusual with its dance beat, reverberant Moog bassline and dreamy processed vocoder aesthetic. With a rousing, almost spiritual quality and elements of JAMES’ ‘Come Home’ creeping in for good measure, it displayed Neil Arthur’s comfort in working with producer Benge on effectively their third album together. “I wanted to sing it as though it was really detached with my voice being synthesized” he told ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK.

Available on the BLANCMANGE album ‘Wanderlust’ via Blanc Check Records

http://www.blancmange.co.uk/


B-MOVIE Stalingrad

Veteran Mansfield quartet B-MOVIE made their most electronic pop single to date with the chilling aesthetics of ‘Stalingrad’. Complete with an infectious synth melody, an eerie mezzo-soprano and using the crucial Second World War battle as a metaphor for a doomed relationship, it was possibly Steve Hovington, Paul Statham, Rick Holliday and Graham Boffey’s  best song since their 21st Century reformation; appropriately, its B-side was called ‘Something Cold’…

Available on the B-MOVIE EP ‘Repetition’ via Loki Records

http://www.b-movie.co.uk/


CHVRCHES Graffiti

‘Get Out’ may have acted as a superb launch single, but starting off their ‘Love Is Dead’ album was the wonderful ‘Graffiti’. This was a classic kaleidoscopic CHVRCHES tune that punched the sky with some rousing vocals. It was also a supreme singalong showcasing Lauren Mayberry, Iain Cook and Martin Docherty in full bouncy Taylor mode. Despite the downcast lyrical demeanour on lost youth and the passing of time, this was still a grand pop statement.

Available on the CHVRCHES album ‘Love Is Dead’ via Virgin Records

https://chvrch.es/


CONFIDENCE MAN Don’t You Know I’m In A Band

Australian duo CONFIDENCE MAN were a ray of sunshine in 2018 with their own brand of campy dork pop, being everything SCISSOR SISTERS should have been. ‘Don’t You Know I’m In A Band’ was an amusing satire on ego and sense of entitlement in the music industry. With an electro take on the groovy swoop of WAR’s ‘Low Rider’, a pitch shifted Sugar Bones came over like an inebriate Teddy Pendergrass while Janet Planet delightfully counterpointed in her alluring girly manner.

Available on the CONFIDENCE MAN album ‘Confident Music For Confident People’ via Heavenly Records

https://www.confidenceman.com.au/


CREEP SHOW Safe & Sound

CREEP SHOW is the meeting of minds between eclectic singer / songwriter John Grant and the dark analogue electro of WRANGLER whose members comprise Stephen Mallinder, Benge and Phil Winter. On ‘Safe & Sound’, the quartet explored a spacious KRAFTWERK and GIORGIO MORODER hybrid to reveal gradually some wonderfully warm melodic synth textures to accompany Grant’s passionate lead croon. The project led to Benge also working on Grant’s ‘Love Is Magic’ album also released in 2018.

Available on the CREEP SHOW album ‘Mr Dynamite’ via Bella Union

http://creepshowmusic.com


RODNEY CROMWELL Comrades

Driven by a meaty electronic bassline and metronomic backbone, the marvellous vocoder-laden ‘Comrades’ by RODNEY CROMWELL captured a really chilling Cold War atmosphere, bathed in an ensemble of sweeping synth oboes and cosmic string machines. “I ended up thumping at the MicroKorg and came up with the opening riff” he said. Rich with melody and a panoramic resonance, it surreally captured the sound of Moroder being played through a Soviet Foxtrot submarine intercom system.

Available on the RODNEY CROMWELL EP ‘Rodney’s English Disco’ via Happy Robots Records

https://www.happyrobots.co.uk/rodney-cromwell


EMIKA Promises

With ‘Falling In Love With Sadness’, EMIKA produced one of the best electronic albums of 2018. The record was a concept album of sorts, a musical reflection on generations of sadness within the Anglo-Czech musician’s family in her most personal statement yet. The pacey ‘Promises’ made the most of her lower and higher vocal registers, providing an eerie cascading harmonic with some rumbling dubby tension and booming stabs driving Eastwards with solemn spine tingling qualities.

Available on the EMIKA album ‘Falling In Love With Sadness’ via Emika Records

http://emikarecords.com/


FARAO Marry Me

Taking in more synthetic ambitions, FARAO’s second album ‘Pure-O’ was a playful bleep forward. While ‘The Ghost Ship’ saw Kari Jahnsen focussed on her forlorn little girl lost lyrics, the wonderfully uptempo ‘Marry Me’ offered an accessible PET SHOP BOYS flavour and romantic layers of vocals masking a deep scepticism of the institution of marriage, while the lush backing and chugging electronic backbone carried the air of her compatriot SUSANNE SUNDFØR.

Available on the FARAO album ‘Pure-O’ via Western Vinyl

http://www.farao.info/


FIAT LUX It’s You

Releasing their first new material in over three decades, FIAT LUX returned with the most splendid ‘It’s You’. As well as the bassline and harmony from David P Crickmore, the sax style was a fitting tribute to the sadly departed Ian Nelson. Singer Steve Wright said: “Lyrically, I hope, it expresses feelings that possibly everyone can relate to…” – their long awaited debut album ‘Saved Symmetry’ is expected in 2019.

Available on the FIAT LUX single ‘It’s You’ via Splid Records

http://www.fiat-lux.co.uk


IONNALEE Fold

The ‘Everyone Afraid To Be Forgotten’ album was easily equal to Jonna Lee’s work with IAMAMIWHOAMI. Best of the set was possibly the marvellous closing number ‘Fold’. Featuring exotic cascading timbres and spacey pulsars, distorted string synths added tan appropriate chill as Lee’s passionate vocals completed the filmic vibe. Less mysterious, the IONNALEE transition was a triumph, especially with one of the best value-for-money live presentations of 2018.

Available on the IONNALEE album ‘Everyone Afraid To Be Forgotten’ via To Whom It May Concern

https://ionnalee.com


KATJA VON KASSEL Someday

Asking if “it is foolish to dream”, ‘Someday’ saw KATJA VON KASSEL questioning a moment of passionate haste. “The phrase ‘Someday’ just opened it all up and everything else just fell into place.” the chanteuse said. Capturing the beautiful melancholy of ASSOCIATES’ Billy Mackenzie, the doomed romantic tragedy of the sadly departed Scot was echoed by the chanteuse’s deep forlorn delivery, accompanied by CHRIS PAYNE’s hypnotic bassline and haunting vox humana treatment over a simple rhythmic loop.

Available on the KATJA VON KASSEL EP ‘Walking In West Berlin’ via https://katjavonkassel.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/KatjavKassel/


LET’S EAT GRANDMA Donnie Darko

Despite their age, LET’S EAT GRANDMA have a feisty but mature musical ambition, as successfully realised on ‘Donnie Darko’, an 11 minute tribute to the troubled teenager haunted by a monstrous rabbit-like figure. Utilising a sedate start before morphing into a wonderful movement of cascading electronics set to a metronomic beat, there were passionate reflections on the subject of human suffering. It all went a bit “batsh*t crazy” into a glorious synthony before calming to its conclusion!

Available on the LET’S EAT GRANDMA album ‘I’m All Ears’ via Transgressive Records

http://letseatgrandma.co.uk


CHRIS LIEBING featuring POLLY SCATTERGOOD And All Went Dark

Noted techno exponent CHRIS LIEBING teamed up with Mute label mate POLLY SCATTERGOOD on a stark polyrhythmic number appropriately titled ‘And All Went Dark’. The brooding minimalist electronic piece with its eerily poetic spoken contribution from Miss Scattergood saw the Essex songstress haunted by a “dark shadow on my shoulder” and telling how “a sickness took hold early on”.

Available on the CHRIS LIEBING album ‘Burn Slow’ via Mute Artists

http://www.chrisliebing.com/


MECHA MAIKO False Memories

With the name transcending Toronto based Hayley Stewart’s fascination with Japanese culture, cyber space and a love of vintage synthesis, ‘Mad But Soft’ was her first album as MECHA MAIKO. The magically crystalline ‘False Memories’ could have been part of the ‘Stranger Things’ soundtrack. Uncomplicated on the surface yet multi-layered and airy, this day-glow pink neo-instrumental concoction was well-thought through and deliciously produced.

Available on the MECHA MAIKO album ‘Mad But Soft’ via New Retro Wave

https://www.facebook.com/mechamaiko/


MAN WITHOUT COUNTRY Lafayette

One-time RÖYSKSOPP collaborator Ryan A James continues to hone and develop his hybrid mix of luxuriant synthetics and subtle guitar textures as MAN WITHOUT COUNTRY. He said about the gorgeous electronic bubblebath of ‘Lafayette’: “It’s really a song about the end of a relationship, disguised as a song about Scientology, and how defectors of Scientology are disowned by their loved ones. The name comes from the religion’s founder Lafayette Ron Hubbard.”

Available on the MAN WITHOUT COUNTRY album ‘Infinity Mirror’ via Killing Moon Records

https://manwithout.country/


NIGHT CLUB Scary World

“Beware! It’s a scary world” and with their BRITNEY SPEARS fronting NINE INCH NAILS template, NIGHT CLUB took their sweet but sinister synth rock sound to its zenith with the title track of their second album. And when the children’s choir joined in the chorus to sing of demons everywhere, this was a musical trick or treat that no parent would want their offspring to be part of, the message being “they only love you if you swallow”!

Available on the NIGHT CLUB album ‘Scary World’ via Gato Blanco

http://nightclubband.com/


NINA 80s Girl

A fabulously optimistic closer to NINA’s debut album, ‘80s Girl’ came beaming over like some missing song from the film ‘Mannequin’. With big Simmons drums, sampled orchestra stabs and driving synthbass triplets, it was however delivered with subtlety and restraint so that it wasn’t a HEART or STARSHIP pastiche. Dedicated to her mother, it had a telling message of “don’t let the past hold you back”.

Available on the NINA album ‘Sleepwalking’ via Aztec Records

http://www.ninamusic.co.uk/


SARAH NIXEY Journey

Perhaps best known as the alluring if slightly blunt chanteuse of BLACK BOX RECORDER, SARAH NIXEY released her best solo album to date in ‘Night Walks’, a quality record with air and presence, collecting everything she has ever been musically, all rolled into one. One of its key tracks was the delightful ‘Journey’, a glorious number of the type that Marc Almond has often been so good at, laced with crystalline synths and gorgeously breathy vocal tones à la Jane Birkin.

Available on the SARAH NIXEY album ‘Night Walks’ via Black Lead Records

http://www.sarahnixey.com/


GARY NUMAN It Will End Here

The ‘Savage’ album turned out to be both an artistic and commercial vindication for GARY NUMAN. ‘It Will End Here’ from ‘The Fallen’ EP was a natural progression from that, exploring a heavy but melodic electronic sound without relying on the predictable backing of rock guitars. With and anthemic chorus and the apocalypse is looming over the aural desert, there was even a soaring vocal pitch shift up at the song’s conclusion which added an extra eerie vampiric quality.

Available on the GARY NUMAN EP ‘The Fallen’ via BMG

https://garynuman.com/


NYXX featuring AESTHETIC PERFECTION Voodoo

NYXX is very much her own woman, like the Greek goddess of night she is named after, a figure of power and beauty with a Britney-like vocal presence that sweetly offsets some of her darker overtones. A collaboration with Daniel Graves of AESTHETIC PERFECTION who contributed a glorious evangelical middle eight, she said “It would not be what it is without him. I came in with a sketch of a song, a melody and lyric of another song… Daniel heard nuances in it and we built what is now ‘Voodoo’.”

Available on the NYXX single ‘Voodoo’ via Close To Human Music

http://www.nyxxnyxxnyxx.com/


PAGE Nere För Räkning

Eddie Bengtsson and Marina Schiptjenko initially came together in PAGE releasing their first single ‘Dansande Man’ in 1983. Since then, the pair have parted and reunited on a number of occasions but the mission for the ‘Start’ EP was to party like it’s 1979 when GARY NUMAN was No1. ‘Nere För Räkning’ was an urgent slice of pulsing synthrock with a piercing vibratoed lead line akin to the keyboard interventions heard on ‘The Pleasure Principle’.

Available on the PAGE EP ‘Start’ via Energy Rekords

https://www.facebook.com/PageElektroniskPop/


PLASMIC Baby Machine

From Mission Viejo in California, PLASMIC describes herself as an “Orange County one-woman dervish” and in a vivid haze that’s pretty in pink, “your abused Barbie doll from childhood”. Combining J-Pop with CRYSTAL CASTLES and DEVO, the undoubted standout from her ‘Validation Nation’ EP was ‘Baby Machine’, an immensely catchy feminist electropop anthem utilising a mixture of vintage Casio and Yamaha sounds that challenged the expectations of women to bear children.

Available on the PLASMIC EP ‘Validation Nation’ via Devour Records

http://www.plasmic.rocks


REED & CAROLINE Entropy

Championed by none other than Vince Clarke, REED & CAROLINE successfully combine tunes with electronic experimentation. The haunting ‘Entropy’ was a tribute to a departed friend and a fabulously touching GARY NUMAN homage to his ‘Dance’ period, in particular ‘Cry The Clock Said’. The hypnotic soundtrack of gentle preset rhythms and eerie electric piano, courtesy of a Buchla modular synth, was complimented by Schutz even adopting the phrasing of the man born Gary Anthony James Webb.

Available on the REED & CAROLINE about ‘Hello Science’ via Very Records

https://www.reedandcaroline.com/


FIFI RONG Red Moon Voyage

Weird and wonderful, ‘Red Moon Voyage’ was a ghostly 10 minute epic comprising of glitchy voices and varying rhythm constructions recorded especially for Halloween. Free of album concepts and the pop song format, this was FIFI RONG at her most adventurous yet, delightfully adding her native Mandarin language towards the third part. “Having a long journey means you can get very deep and lots of moods and transitions” she told ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK

Available on the FIFI RONG single ‘Red Moon Voyage’ via https://fifirong.bandcamp.com/track/red-moon-voyage-full

http://fifirong.com/


SOFT CELL Northern Lights

Marc Almond and Dave Ball were the boys who came back-back-BACK as SOFT CELL in 2018. ‘Northern Lights’ reminisced about their days at the Wigan Casino and recaptured the pop essence that led to the duo having five consecutive Top 10 hits! Despite the grittiness and energetics, the duo always had melody and that came back in abundance on their welcome recorded return. The darker B-Side ‘Guilty (‘Cos I Say You Are)’ affirmed that as a creative force, SOFT CELL still had it.

Available on the SOFT CELL EP ‘Northern Lights’ via Universal Music

http://www.softcell.co.uk/


STOLEN Turn Black

Chinese six-piece STOLEN are reckoned by Berlin-based producer Mark Reeder to be possibly the most exciting band he has seen since NEW ORDER. Certainly their debut album ‘Fragment’ was impressive and one of the best of 2018, with ‘Turn Black’ being one of the standout tracks. “I like the idea of mixing of rock with techno…” said growly lead vocalist Liang Yi to ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK, “we are very proud that we don’t sound like any of the other Chinese bands.”

Available on the STOLEN ‘Fragment’ via MFS

https://www.facebook.com/strangeoldentertainment/


U96 + WOLFGANG FLÜR Zukunftsmusik

Ingo Hauss and Hayo Lewerentz handed back the BOYTRONIC brand to Holger Wobker and returned to being U96, teaming up with former KRAFTWERK percussionist Wolfgang Flür for the best track by either party in recent years. Stark and Teutonic with stark robotic vocoder aesthetics, the union of two German musical heavyweights from different generations was equal to Flür’s ‘Activity Of Sound’ collaboration with Ireland’s iEUROPEAN.

Available on the U96 single ‘Zukunftsmusik’ via UNLTD Recordings

https://www.facebook.com/U96reboot/


HILARY WOODS Jesus Said

Combining piano, synths, field recordings, drones, occasional beats, old string instruments and HILARY WOODS’ wonderfully forlorn voice in the vein of Julee Cruise, ‘Jesus Said’ questioned the existence of God. Described by the Irish songstress herself as “a song that seeks catharsis”, her child-like expression over the drifting synthesized tones and hypnotic drum machine to augment her beautiful piano playing gave ‘Jesus Said’ a gentle meditative quality.

Available on the HILARY WOODS album ‘Colt’ via Sacred Bones

http://www.hilarywoods.com


Text by Chi Ming Lai
3rd December 2018

STOLEN Fragment

After a ten year hiatus, the legendary German dance label MFS returns with the release of ‘Fragment’, the long-awaited new album by Chengdu techno-rockers STOLEN.

An acronym for “strange old entertainment”, this album is a seamless hour long trip in more ways than one. Produced in Berlin by Mark Reeder and his musical sidekick Micha Adam, having witnessed their intense live presentation while on a tour of China, Reeder confessed to an excitement he hadn’t experienced since the early days of NEW ORDER.

Reeder said: “Personally, I wanted their album to sound like nothing that had come out of China before, as their music is not stuck in one particular style, but is a nice mixture of darkwave rock, techno and a billion other influences, even krautrock. They are such talented and open-minded musicians that it was very easy to suggest something and try it out, and when it worked, then we would just go with the flow.”

In common with NEW ORDER, STOLEN mix electronics with guitars and technology with live drums. Held together by the growling vocal presence of Liang Yi, ‘Fragment’ is the Sinographic end result of East meeting West, laced with psychedelic overtones and mysterious cinematics. Ecstatic and unlike anything to have ever emerged musically from China, ‘Fragment’ opens its account with ‘Chaos’, a spiky synergy of dance and rock.

‘Neutral Life’ has hints of ‘Oxygene 2’ with a subtle Schaffel pulse and a sinister snakey presence aided by horror film swoops and the cerebral headrush of PINK FLOYD. Bare and whispery, ‘Enter The Gap’ takes things down before the superb rigid pulse of ‘Why We Chose To Die In Berlin’ pays tribute to Germany with a burst of KRAFTWERK circa 1991 at the halfway point before mutating into an exuberant haze of trancey energy.

A very European electronic goth template is applied on the techno-driven ‘Copyshop’, its haunting synth glimmers and raw vocals setting it apart. “I like the idea of mixing of rock with techno…” said Liang Yi, “we are very proud that we don’t sound like any of the other Chinese bands.”

“They sleep in fancy coffins” observes Liang Yi on the mutant piano-driven electro reggae of ‘Vampire Lovers’ as the seductive spy drama cimbalom and chromatic guitar provide a distinctly Eastern European flavour. ‘Frozen Song’ is suitably icy, building to a hypnotic four-to-the-floor backbeat as Banshee-like guitar trembles over bubbling electronic sequences.

The agitated progressive electro romp of ‘Turn Black’ has an arrangement that magnificently develops within a single song before the drifting lilt of ‘From The Future’, a less mechanically driven track with drumming reminiscent of JOY DIVISION. Closing ‘Fragment’ is ‘The Loop Sin’, a classic Reeder production full of heavy propulsive grit and live textural enhancements.

A well-thought out, well-crafted album with plenty of adventure, space and mystery within its multi-genre cocoon, ‘Fragment’ is likely to appeal to fans of electronic pop, techno, prog and alternative rock.

“I think ‘Fragment’ is a very listenable album” said Mark Reeder, “The club tracks work in a club environment, I know that because I have tried them out in my DJ sets, and the quieter tracks are to sit back and relax to.”

Proving musically that the Far East is not just about J-Pop, K-Pop and C-Rap, STOLEN have provided a welcome cultural counter-balance with one of the best albums of 2018.


‘Fragment’ is released by MFS as a vinyl LP and download album, available from https://stolenmusic.bandcamp.com/album/fragment

STOLEN open for NEW ORDER on the following European live dates:

Prague Lucerna Praha (3rd October), Munich Philharmonie Im Gasteig (5th October), Berlin Tempodrom (7th October), Paris Le Grand Rex (11th October), Brussels Forest International (14th October), Amsterdam AFAS Live (17th October)

https://www.facebook.com/STOLENfromChina/

https://www.instagram.com/stolen_official/

https://mfsberlin.com/

https://twitter.com/KAIGUANCULTURE

https://open.spotify.com/album/3PzmbWjYqgiSZFFkZSh85s


Text by Chi Ming Lai
26th October 2018, updated 11th June 2019

STOLEN Interview

After a ten year absence, Masterminded For Success are back!

And the iconic Berlin label founded by Mark Reeder which discovered PAUL VAN DYK and COSMIC BABY have signed STOLEN, the hottest band in China, for the next leg of their musical journey. Reeder has always said he created his label for the Eastie kids and now he‘s ventured to the Far East and found STOLEN.

C-Pop trails behind J-Pop and K-Pop in the world’s cultural stakes, even among those fascinated by South East Asian culture but STOLEN aim to change the musical perception of China with their brilliant new album ‘Fragment’.

Released on MFS this Autumn, ‘Fragment’ will bring STOLEN’s Sino-graphic post-punk techno rock sound to a wider European audience. Recorded and produced in Berlin by Mark Reeder and Micha Adam, the working class sextet emerged from Chengdu’s underground music scene.

Along with FIFI RONG and Re-TROS, STOLEN are part of a new generation of creative Chinese artists who have combined East with West to create their own unique hybrid sounds.

ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK chatted to Liang Yi, lead singer of STOLEN, about the development of the band and the music scene in China…

The last time ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK was really aware of the Hong Kong pop music scene was in 1989, when it was all-round entertainers like Sally Yip and Leslie Cheung plus lots of Western cover versions. How was the music scene in China when you were growing up?

I became aware and very interested in pop music around 1998 from about the age of three or four. Back then, a certain style of Chinese pop music began to emerge at that time, mainly influenced by Western pop music, and popular producers madly absorbed various musical styles from the West.

China was just waking up and everything was new to us. Almost every modern musical style was presented like this, but in a very empty way – that is, Chinese pop music was just emulating western pop music trends, but really without any soul. They combine the most basic elements of all styles from rock, jazz, hip-hop, electronics, or even drama, but with simple, easy to digest lyrics and melodies.

The environment in which I grew up did not constitute a music scene, because it was more a product of general entertainment business interests, and driven by commercialisation rather than creating something positive and culturally important. There wasn’t any desire to expand outside of China and make something that would express a modern, musical face of China. The idea that it could be culturally significant or go beyond our borders was never really considered, unless it was in the form of Chinese traditional classical music.

Although it is undeniable that there are some good Chinese pop records, they still fail to touch the level of what could be considered artistic. It’s mainly just similarity. Besides, because they had struggled so much before, people during the late 90s era considered food and branded clothing to be much more important issues, combined with their desire live and work in peace. The attitude of most people towards art is probably inaccessible, as they don’t really understand it.

Even in Hong Kong and Western Chinese communities, parents are not exactly supportive of children who express an interest in the arts. So how did your parents react when you said you wanted to make music as a career?

I have always loved singing and caring about pop music since I was a child, and my parents just watched.

They have never encouraged me to make music. I’m sure they would prefer I became a lawyer, doctor or architect, as it is very difficult for my parents’ generation to defy tradition. But as I seemed to be uninterested in things other than music and fashion culture, my parents just let me do what made me happy.

Towards the end of junior high school, I was fed up with hearing about the stupid activities of the petty junior gangster types who grew up in the small town where I lived, they were always doing something dangerous on the edge of the law. They thought this was cool. I think they were bored and this was their way to excitement.

I didn’t want a life like that. I wanted to do something creative, not destructive. After I received the admission notice from the Sichuan Conservatory High School of Music, I went to take the exam and the school accepted me. Since then, my parents have supported and always believed in my choices, even though they are probably very confused. They are more and more reassured by the positive achievements and reactions I receive and are confident at the choice I have made. In fact, many parents in China have begun to change their attitude towards our generation. They just want their children to be healthy and happy, and not do bad things.

In the West, we saw documentaries about WHAM! and Jean-Michel Jarre visiting and touring China, did these concerts ever become stories that were talked about locally in the development of Chinese popular music culture?

For me, WHAM! is much too old. I was not even born at that time. Later, I learned that they came to China and caused a sensation, but there was no revolutionary change in our music scene because of it.

Did LADYTRON coming to Chengdu in 2004 have any impact?

At that time, I was still living in the small city where I grew up and I was not in Chengdu, so I am not quite sure. At least no one has ever mentioned it to me, so probably not.

What is Chengdu’s music scene like compared with Hong Kong, Guangzhou, Shanghai or Beijing?

In recent years, there seems to be very few new bands coming out of Guangzhou, Shanghai, and Beijing. In such a vastly populated country like China, you would think there would be many creative people all wanting to make music, fashion and art. Maybe there are, but they are forced to think about their livelihoods.

In my opinion, this is mainly because these three mega-cities are much too biased towards financial development, so it is difficult to develop an independent music culture and arts scene in a place where the main focus is on construction, business and money. This has stifled the creative atmosphere.

Young people in China are beginning to find it very hard to get a good job, and then it is very hard to keep their job and so they are compelled to work all-hours, so there is no time to make music, besides, music is mainly a non-profitable business and if you are not dedicated or ambitious not attractive.

Yet I think it’s essential that we have and nurture our own alternative music and arts scene. This is what gives a country its cultural identity, not just the manufacture of consumer goods. There are a lot of difficulties in forming a band, and many questions arise, like where do you practice? How do you get gigs? There’s a lot of work involved to write songs, practice for a concert and maintain a presence, and so it is increasingly difficult for young bands to find these places and have the space to form independent bands.

For sure, as the city expands, Chengdu may be facing the same problem in the future, but for the present it is really good now. This is due to the fact that people in this part of Sichuan are more relaxed and prefer to enjoy life at a slower pace. We have our own small but energetic music scene. For us, the value is not so important. So life may be a little easier than in the special economic zones.

How is Chengdu shaping up as a creative musical hub? What types of bands are forming there and how does the government view these artistic ambitions?

It is very simple. Beijing is the centre, it’s the seat of our government, they want to present a good image of stability and so there are and must be maintained certain restrictions on all kinds of things, including the expression of creative art and independent music scenes.

This doesn’t mean things don’t happen, but they are not as relaxed like in Berlin or London. As the international trading centre of China, Shanghai has put more brains on the money. Chengdu as a historical city, is the key point for the development of the western region of China. Coupled with the casual lifestyle of the people, it has naturally contributed to the growth of art. Chengdu’s underground music scene from hip-hop to rock music to electronic music is the most dynamic in China.

The government is actually promoting Chengdu now as the cultural centre. They still focus on a more business-oriented culture, and they may not have time to pay attention to the real part of art. Sometimes we Chinese don’t have enough time to pay attention, because our development is happening very fast.

A lot of music that is coming out of China and being heard in the West appears to be more punk or rock based, so what attracted STOLEN to include an electronic element to its sound?

I am not really a hard rock or metal music fan. I like the idea of mixing of rock with techno though. Since discovering this specific style of music, I’ve come to prefer the more gloomier sound of British music, from bands like JOY DIVISION, PORTISHEAD, BLUR, MASSIVE ATTACK or RADIOHEAD.

I’m quite obsessed with the experimentation of APHEX TWIN, more or less some synthesizer elements of RADIOHEAD, or the sound of the Moog in PORTISHEAD’s music, the feeling of some dance music style featured in Damon Albarn’s own pop-band GORILLAZ, or the icy German synthesizer taste of JOY DIVISION.

These bands have given us inspiration and enlightenment, and at least we know that we can add a synthesizer or electronic element to our music too and we like it. Until we had the opportunity to go to Hong Kong to see KRAFTWERK, we were not fully aware of what was possible.

This concert completely opened the door to us to study electronic music, so we began to integrate more electronic elements into our sound adding sampling and a large number of synthesizer passages, even adding synth effects to the vocals, we also added drum machines which would play in conjunction with our drummer.

Later, I studied how to make electronic music, but with using the same set up as rock music, and we made a lot of experiments. Finally, this has become the sound of the band at present. We are very proud that we don’t sound like any of the other Chinese bands. Regardless, we hope our music will open people towards this mixture. It’s just a matter of time.

What are STOLEN’s own influences and how did you first hear about them?

As I have already mentioned, bands like JOY DIVISION, PORTISHEAD, BLUR, MASSIVE ATTACK, KRAFTWERK, NEW ORDER, RADIOHEAD, DEPECHE MODE or APHEX TWIN have been very inspiring to us. We still have a lot of music to discover.

I don’t know if people are aware that Chinas modern music development is very new compared to the West. Only since the end of the 90s has the country opened up and the attitude changed towards listening to music from the West. During my studies, my guitar teacher gave me a lot of his own CDs to listen to, which contained a lot of this style of music. But personally, I’ve realised I prefer the more dark, and deeper voices.

As a six piece band, how would you describe the creative dynamic of STOLEN?

We have been together as a band since we were teenagers and we are a fully played-up team. There are no ego issues and each band member knows his place, function and that really helps us when we are all working or writing together, so no one is the special core.

Everyone contributes their part. Our keyboard player is more technical and he will do almost all our technical work. I am the director and give directions and creative input and ideas to the band, and the guitarist also brings a lot of motivation and some basic ideas. Bass and drums are responsible for writing their own parts.

We have a VJ too, who performs his visuals directly with us on stage as part of the band. He uses all his own self-made images, which go with each song and so he can be very flexible and he’s able to improvise whenever it’s required, he is a very live VJ! He is also responsible for the entire visual design of the band. We feel that this is good because everyone gives something to the puzzle and together we can create something that maybe even we can’t even think of. It is very nice feeling!

STOLEN have a gritty, techno rock sound with hints of pyschedelia, how did this develop?

I don’t quite understand this question, but if it’s about why we have a little psychedelic taste in our music, it’s probably because we come from Chengdu. Although we have this element to our music, I want to say that we are not hippies, we are much too post-punk for that, but we love psychedelic music and the culture of that era. Sometimes we add a little feeling to our own music, but that is totally unintentional.

The new album ‘Fragment’ is produced by Mark Reeder, how did you meet him?

Ni Bing, a mutual friend of ours, introduced him to us. Ni Bing has known Mark for many years and has done many tours of China with him, he also knows many foreign artists and is a senior player in the Chinese independent music business. He heard a demo of our music and felt that from all the people he knows, Mark would probably be most interested.

So when Mark was invited to DJ and show his film ‘B-Movie: Lust & Sound in West-Berlin 1979-1989’, we were invited to perform at the same festival in Chengdu together. We sent Mark our demo and asked him his thoughts.

After he saw us perform live, we went into the studio together to make a demo. It ended up being an EP. He was able to define our sound the way we hadn’t imagined. That Mark finally contributed to this project was the first time we felt connected with JOY DIVISION, and we were very excited! Hahaha!

You came to Berlin to record with Mark and his studio partner Micha Adam, what did they bring to the STOLEN sound that you might not have found yourselves?

They made our sound more unified and harmonic. They didn’t change much about the songs themselves, they kept all our basic concepts, and they added a few ideas. Mark helped me with the intonation of some of my lyrics, but it was mainly in their choice and use of sound that mattered most. It can be said that we didn’t know how to make such a record before, but Mark and Micha absolutely were able to show us how to do this and how they work as a production team.

So what is ‘Why We Chose to Die In Berlin’ about? ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK loves how there are elements of KRAFTWERK in there at the halfway point before it mutates into something else.

This is a reflection. One day I watched a documentary about German synthesizer music at my home, where they mentioned Berlin a lot and I looked forward to visiting the city after reading about it. At the time I wrote it, I hadn’t even been to Berlin. So there was no superfluous concept, it was only in my imagination and perhaps some hope.

When I visited Berlin for the first time, I realised what an amazing place it is, and that’s when I discovered that my initial concept was actually not a dream, but had been fully materialised. We loved Berlin and we thought we could all die happy there.

Glad to hear you like some of the Kraftwerkian ideas in this song. Obviously it doesn’t sound like KRAFTWERK, but we were inspired. In fact, I was a bit worried that the audience would feel that this song is a bit too flattering… but this is the kind of club sound that I yearn for and is something that can be played every day, it’s not about the nightlife, drugs, or worshiping foreign things… it’s just from my imagination and the desire for the unknown.

‘Chaos’ is a superb album opener with a mighty sound which moves into all sorts of places musically, how did you achieve that?

Do you think so? Thank you, that’s great to hear! In fact, this song was almost like the band’s bottleneck and before we made this song, we were not certain how to bring it together. Mark managed to do that. He helped us a lot.

After our first album, we wanted to make new music, faster, but this desire affected us all mentally and we were almost stuck for nearly half a year. We wanted to make the structure and sound of our music much simpler and clearer and more fluid.

We were thinking of just making an album that was basic and sounded like we would be playing the songs live, but Mark pointed out to us that we could just simply record a live album if we wanted that, and that the studio is a place to push the bands boundaries, be creative, think outside the box and excel.

He said, an album is a documentation of a moment in a band’s career and it reflects that moment for all time. At the time of making ‘Chaos’, this song seemed to meet our requirements at the time, but Mark took us on a new adventure.

What is interesting about your arrangements is how they develop within a single song, ‘Turn Black’ being a case in point. Do you think the attitude is almost like progressive rock?

We initially wanted to make a very club-friendly dance track, so we asked Mark to come to our studio in Chengdu and guide us. I think because of his background and age, Mark understood exactly what we needed and we made a demo together, which we  released as an EP in China.

He still managed to keep all the dance elements and add atmosphere, but also make it sound like a rock track too. This inspired us immensely. It had a techno edge but was still quite rocky. This was great to fuse these two elements because many people found it to be more rock and that was equally suitable for our little scene! The version on the album is actually a reworking of the track, so that those people who bought our EP don’t feel they are getting the same song.

STOLEN in places, have a very European electronic Goth template as exemplified by ‘Copyshop’, but your raw vocals really set it apart from anything that people may have heard before within this style. Was that intentional?

Is that true? We didn’t know this song would invoke this feeling! I don’t know if it was intentional or not. It just happened. It was a feeling we wanted to express, we didn’t think about the Goth aspect. We thought that this song would be seen as very Chinese.

The song is about imitation. In the past, many bands would simply copy artists and fashionable styles from the West. It’s so much easier than creating something for yourself, especially when someone has already done all the hard work before you. There is no risk involved. It is our basic principle to try and separate our sound from other music. We can let others hear our influence, but we don’t want to become a “copy shop” ourselves! We are trying to inspire others to join us and create our own Sino-sound.

How are your plans for releasing the ‘Fragment’ album coming along?

It is all very exciting. First, we have released ‘Chaos’ as a single. Then we will release ‘Fragment’ globally at the end of October. We will be releasing it in China on an independent label and it will be the first time that a band has not signed away all its rights to the songs, which is the usual practice for a band. In China, a band usually gets money for the album and then loses all control. We wanted to do it the European way. This move is so radical in China. It’s never been done before. So we are setting the bar really high.

The biggest surprise is that Mark has reactivated his MFS label and will release ‘Fragment’ on vinyl, in conjunction with our French manager’s label in Europe. Mark stopped his MFS label in 2008 because he was bored and said he wanted to wait until something excited him. Our album will also be released on UMAA in Japan too, which is also very exciting for us. We are currently in the midst of intense production preparation and I’m doing lots of interviews.

What are STOLEN’s hopes and fears? How difficult is it to arrange to perform live in places like Europe for example? And how does this compare to performing in China?

Our hope is to be the new voice of a young, modern China and we want to be the first band representing China in this way. The fear is always that our music is not good enough to compete on the global stage, but Mark said that’s rubbish, and that we are good enough. I have to believe him, after all, he has seen us perform a few times and I think he can judge.

As for touring differences, well maybe because we have seven people in the band, flight tickets are a big pressure on the show side. Not every venue can afford to fly us over. In China, it’s easier and cheaper. And not forgetting, we are almost starting from scratch in Europe, as no one knows us… yet.

However, the European performances we have experienced were all undoubtedly very professional and in a way shocking to us. We learnt so much. I only refer to the maturity and professionalism of the European performance system with awe as it really showed us what is possible.

China will eventually get better, but since performing in Europe, we have always insisted on bringing our own attitude. To inspire more Chinese workers to this industry, we always try our best to bring some of our own lighting fixtures and our own stage team with us on tour. I hope that the performance environment of an independent band will have a positive effect in China.

Do upcoming Chinese artists like Re-TROS opening for DEPECHE MODE and FIFI RONG collaborating with YELLO give you optimism for a wider breakthrough?

Yes, of course! We would also like to have a respected European band embrace us too and appreciate us as well. The idea of touring with the likes of NEW ORDER, LCD SOUNDSYSTEM or THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS would be more than a dream come true. I also believe this will eventually happen. We will also work very hard for it!

The Chinese music market likes ‘karaoke versions’ of songs to be available, does this figure in STOLEN’s plans for the release of ‘Fragment’?

Karaoke is something that has grown up with us, but at the moment it doesn’t apply to us. I can’t imagine anyone singing ‘Chaos’ in a Karaoke club! The messy copyright situation and poor sound quality of the cover version music is not so attractive. But your idea is very interesting. You really know China! I’m surprised!

A lighter final question… ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK likes to do ‘True Faith’ by NEW ORDER at karaoke, so if there was a song you had to sing in a karaoke bar, what would you choose? 😉

Hahahahahahahaha! OK, I would choose PORTISHEAD ‘The Rip’ or ‘Over’! After all, I am a singer! I hope to sing more difficult songs in the future. Hahahaha…


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to STOLEN

Special thanks to Mark Reeder

‘Fragment’ is released by MFS on 26th October 2018 in digital and vinyl LP formats, available from https://mfsberlin.com/

https://www.facebook.com/STOLENfromChina/

https://www.instagram.com/stolen_official/

https://twitter.com/KAIGUANCULTURE


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
19th October 2018

Introducing STOLEN

With Re-TROS opening for DEPECHE MODE on their 2017 UK Arena tour and FIFI RONG collaborating with YELLO, China is becoming a hub of new music talent which potentially can appeal to the rest of the world. 

The next act likely to breakthrough are STOLEN from Chengdu in Szechuan province which serves the hottest food in China thanks to their locally grown peppercorns.

And now in STOLEN, they have the hottest band in South East Asia. A group of young working class guys, their gloomy style has a dark European air, although other aspects of STOLEN’s sound are trickier to pinpoint geographically. Meanwhile the growly vocal presence of Liang Yi is something unique in electronic music.

STOLEN’s debut album ‘Fragment’ has been produced by Mark Reeder and Micha Adam in Berlin, while it will be released on the former’s legendary record label MFS which gave Paul Van Dyk his first break as a recording artist before he became a superstar DJ. From their 2015 album ‘Loop’, ‘Electric Echo’ characterises their raw Sinographic sound.

But refined under the studio auspcies of Mark Reeder, ‘Chaos’ is the spiky progressive opening track from the ‘Fragment’ album, energised by a mix of electronics and techno rock. The accompanying monochromatic video written, directed and edited by Formol featuring a tape gimp possesses a starkly mysterious quality, very much like STOLEN themselves.

The band met Reeder in Chengdu while he was on a two month tour of China with his film ‘B-Movie: Lust & Sound in West Berlin 1979-1989’ and went to see the sextet perform. “It’s unlike anything you have ever heard from China” he enthusiastically told ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK, “It’s groundbreaking, exciting and ecstatic”.

This fragment is STOLEN, from China!


‘Chaos’ is from the album ‘Fragment’ released by MFS in digital and vinyl LP formats released on 26th October 2018, available from https://mfsberlin.com/

https://www.facebook.com/STOLENfromChina/

https://www.instagram.com/stolen_official/

https://twitter.com/KAIGUANCULTURE


Text by Chi Ming Lai
12th October 2018

A Not So Short Conversation with MARK REEDER

Having remixed NEW ORDER, DEPECHE MODE, PET SHOP BOYS and BLANK & JONES, Berlin-based Mancunian Mark Reeder possesses a notable portfolio of work.

The one–time Factory Records representative for Germany and respected techno trailblazer has been credited with introducing electronic dance music to NEW ORDER.

Meanwhile, his acclaimed documentary film ‘B-Movie (Lust & Sound in West-Berlin)’ captured the legendary subkultur of the divided city from the post-punk era to The Iron Curtain fall at the end of 1989; playing in cinemas all around the world, a number of showings were accompanied by Q&As with Reeder himself afterwards.

The symbolism of The Berlin Wall and its relevance to the current worldwide political climate inspired his album ‘Mauerstadt’ which was released in Summer 2017, featuring remixes of NEW ORDER and INSPIRAL CARPETS, plus collaborations with THE KVB, EKKOES, MFU and QUEEN OF HEARTS amongst others.

Taking time out from his busy schedule, Mark Reeder chatted about a number of his recent music projects, including an exciting new Chinese band called STOLEN he has produced and whose debut album ‘Fragment’ will be released on his iconic record label MFS, which has been resurrected for the occasion.

A year on, how do you think ‘Mauerstadt’ has been received and are you generally still happy with it?

Well Chi, to be honest, I’m never ever one hundred percent satisfied. I always feel that I could have done better, that’s just me. I am very strict on myself. Luckily, I know when to stop and always hope that I can improve with the next release.

The ‘Mauerstadt’ limited CD was released in Autumn 2017 and the limited double vinyl finally at the end of December, just in time for Christmas. Naturally, it would have been really nice if we had been able to release them simultaneously and sell thousands, but in today’s physical record market, that’s sadly no longer the case. That said, it’s done really well and I’m quite pleased at the reactions. I think it’s an album you can listen to today or in ten years time.

We still have a couple of CDs and a handful of white limited vinyls available, because we put a few aside for latecomers, but once they are gone, people will start selling them on eBay for ridiculous prices, like some of my previous releases.

The main attention drawn towards ‘Mauerstadt’ was with your two remixes for NEW ORDER of ‘Academic’ and ‘The Game’?

Of course, yes the main attraction of ‘Mauerstadt’ were my two versions of ‘Academic’ and ‘The Game’ that I had made for NEW ORDER. These were released a few weeks before my album by Mute as a digital download package only, so all those NEW ORDER music completists that want to have a physical version are practically compelled to buy my album, which I hope doesn’t disappoint them too much.

Initially, I was asked to remix ‘Academic’, but then I ended up remixing ‘Singularity’ instead and so ‘Academic’ found its way on to my album, along with ‘The Game’ that I had reworked especially for ‘Mauerstadt’.

One of the most interesting collaborations was with THE KVB, what attracted you to their brooding percussive sound?

I had been following THE KVB for quite a while and I really loved their ‘Of Desire’ album. Then I discovered they were living in Berlin, so we met up for a coffee and one thing led to another. I ended up remixing one of my favourite tracks off their album, ‘White Walls’, which they released on a limited edition 12” vinyl.

As I was in the process of putting together ‘Mauerstadt’, I asked them if they would be interested in collaborating on a track. They told me they had started on a piece, but it was basically a skeleton, in fact, just a simple guitar sequence, so I added some twangy rhythm, a bass guitar and a synth melody and Kat fleshed it out by adding vocals, more keyboards and her riff; Nic added more guitars and vocals and then it started to come together.

I wanted to make it sound foreboding and tense, and present a dark insight to what our future could be if we don’t get our act together, by giving it a bit of a dystopian feel with the threat of imminent nuclear attack.

On the other side of the spectrum, you did two songs with synthpoppers EKKOES who appear to have a much tougher sound when you’re at the helm?

I like them. I worked with them on one of their first tracks and debuted it and the band on my ‘Five-Point-One’ surround sound album. They made a very surreal and dreamy video for it. I think John has got a very distinctive voice, which is complemented by Rose and Dave is a man of many talents. I wanted these two songs to have a more poppy-dance feel to them. Of course, their versions of these songs will eventually be featured on their own album.

You recently remixed Mute signings LIARS’ ‘Staring At Zero’, what was your approach to that?

I think LIARS are fantastic. One of the best live bands I’ve seen. So entertaining. I met Angus in Berlin and a while later I was asked to remix ‘Staring at Zero’, a track off their ‘TFCF’ album. Their original version is quite disjointed and I wanted to make a version that I could play in my DJ sets. So I listened intensely to the track and discovered all the little bits that I could use.

I took a short part, looped it and added a heavy duty beat, with a sub bass, which I then made into the main groove and then I added a crunchy bass guitar riff and more synths. As always, I used as many of the original parts as I could so that I could retain the feeling and sound of their version. Angus was really pleased and thanked me by saying it was the best LIARS remix he’d ever heard, which was a huge compliment, especially coming from him.

You’ve been to China and worked with an electronic band called STOLEN, how did you discover them and how do you assess their potential?

I was introduced to STOLEN by an old DJ friend of mine, radio show host, NiBing of Drum Rider Records. I have worked with NiBing since the end of the 90s and he brought me over to China many times.

He had arranged for me to perform at a great little festival on the edge of a forest outside of Chengdu and STOLEN were headlining one of the nights. Just before I arrived, they sent me a few demos and I could already hear their potential. They just didn’t know how to get there… yet.

Before the gig, I sat in at one of their practice sessions and I was really impressed. Their demos didn’t do them justice at all. So, we went into the studio in Chengdu after the festival and we recorded three new demo songs, more to see what would happen than anything else. They posted them up in China, and the response was very positive and so the band decided to release them in China as an EP. It was quite successful for them.

In China they don’t have a chart, they have a ratings system, whereby a song, album or film is rated by how many likes it receives. Their EP got a very high rating, which brought the band to ask me to produce their new album, but as these three songs were already on the EP, I decided to remix them for the album, so that they are different to the EP versions. I really like STOLEN as people, they are a dedicated and ambitious bunch of working class lads, who are very passionate about their music. They work, practice, write and tour. They obviously live and breathe it every day and I like to see that ambitious fever.

China is a huge country, so have different music genres grown and mutated in particular regions?

Yes it is, and unfortunately I haven’t seen all of it yet, but I hope to one day. From what I have seen though, there is a desire to achieve acceptance, especially from the West. Most Chinese bands feel they are not worthy or competent enough to compete with their image of well-promoted Western bands, but I think this is an illusion and quite the wrong attitude.

They should be proud, as they have some super talented and creative musicians in China, all waiting for that one lucky break, and it’s really only a matter of time before they get recognised by the West and are able to perform on an equal platform.

Like I previously mentioned, there is a budding new music scene in Chengdu, and I saw some great bands there like the all-girl group HORMONES. I noticed there are a lot of girls making music and DJing in China. Which was very refreshing. At most of the talks I gave, the girls were always in the majority. While I was in China, I also produced an album for an all-girl band from Beijing called HANG ON THE BOX, who told me they had initially been inspired by MALARIA!

In a weird way, the rapid rise of K-Pop in the West is starting to open doors and change perceptions towards all kinds of East Asian artists. Westerners are discovering new things from Asia all the time, thanks to connected links and tags on platforms like YouTube or Vimeo and this is broadening people’s musical horizons.

Of course, there are a lot of imitators out there too, especially when it comes to musical styles, such as EDM, hip hop and rap or even traditional techno. It’s easy to jump on an already successful bandwagon. It’s normal, once something becomes popular everyone wants a piece of the action. We also have to understand, the young Chinese don’t have a long, evolving pop or rock music history, like we do in the West, as theirs is only happening now. We all know that copying is all part of learning, but eventually, you decide to go it alone. You want to establish yourself, and this is where China finds itself now.

The über-commercial pop music styles, which the West has successfully sold to the Chinese since the start of the millennium, have over-saturated themselves and are becoming a bit stale. After talking to many young students for example, I could feel their frustration and I felt that Chinese kids shouldn’t really be imitating America anymore, because that’s a one-way street.

They should now be thinking about creating their own playworld. I guess they just had never thought about that before, because it just wasn’t possible before. The new generation of fashionable twenty-odd year olds that I met, are simply thirsty for culture, but who up until now, they didn’t have much in the way of an alternative to adhere to and certainly not a home-grown one whereby people could really identify or be proud of.

Now the tables are slowly turning. I believe if one Chinese band manages to achieve recognition and real success in the West, this will open up a whole new playing ground for both sides. A prospect which I find really exciting.

If the USA carries on shutting the doors on foreign artists, they will eventually stop being influential. We need to look towards the East and embrace these young, fresh and eager artists and see how we can come together and be creative. That is exciting!

The Chinese are on the brink of creating their own brand of progressive underground music and the scene to go along with it. I found there is a very strong desire to create something new, the bands are experimenting by mixing genres and styles and adding a touch of their own, they just haven’t found the right formula to get there yet. Eventually they will. Being a musician in China still isn’t easy however.

They still have strict rules and regulations, especially when it comes to lyrics, but these are just obstacles an artist has to work around, to find a compromise which will make both sides happy. It is not rebellion, that is all part of being creative. It’s great that they’re almost reinventing themselves.

I discovered that STOLEN are an exceptional band, they are all very good musicians and each can equally play drums, guitars, bass or keyboards. They have been together since their early teenage years. I discovered some very talented people on my tour too, many who are floundering in their huge mega cities and not knowing there are others out there with a similar desire and no idea where to turn.

This maybe has something to do with the lack of focal points, like the availability of music periodicals or platforms which focus on a particular music and fashion genre. That is unfortunately, the modern world. China is so immense and there is not a single platform anymore. I hope that with their achievements, STOLEN can help to change that.

You brought STOLEN over to Berlin to record their album ‘Fragment’. What changes did you see in them as they absorbed the local atmosphere?

Actually, almost none, as there just wasn’t enough time. We had such a tight schedule, that we decided to take advantage of their jet-lag and so we worked all day in the studio and in the late evenings they just ate, rested watching TV, listened to music and slept. They hardly went out. Besides, Berlin in winter was much too cold for them, coming from the tropical climes of Chengdu. They went to a couple of gigs while they were here, but really not much else. I was very happy with their conscientious approach to work, which was great, as we could always start really early.

Thankfully, they had been to Berlin before on a holiday trip, so they had already experienced the music scene here and had visited clubs like Tresor, Berghain, Griessmuhle and such places. I think this time, they probably spent more time in music instrument shops, supermarkets and cooking than clubbing – By the way, they are all great cooks too – Szechuan style!

As a six-piece band, how did you capture STOLEN’s obvious spiky energy while ensuring that there was a reasonably polished product that at the end of the day could sell their sound?

We had quite a few long talks even before they came out to Berlin. I wanted to see where they wanted to go, what is their aim. They had played me a few demo ideas and expressed their desires.

Atmosphere was very important to them. We wanted the album to invoke a particular feeling. One thing they were initially worried about was performing the songs live. Their first idea was to just record the songs and then mix them so they had more of a live feeling, but I thought it would be a wasted opportunity. I wanted to make them an album that would help to elevate the band to another level.

I started out with their live idea and just worked on fine tuning the rest, that way I was able to capture the energy of the live element without it sounding like a live recording. I convinced the band that they had to separate live from studio, after all, the album is the thing that will last, whereby a live gig is a thing of that moment.

I also thought, it would be good for them to have a challenge afterwards, to bring their album to the live stage, as that would help them to solve problems and evolve. They asked me to choose the running order of the album and so I decided it should unfold a bit like a story, similar in the way they write their songs. I am very pleased with the end result, as it has turned out to be something to listen to as well as dance to.

Personally, I wanted their album to sound like nothing that had come out of China before, as their music is not stuck in one particular style, but is a nice mixture of darkwave rock, techno and a billion other influences, even krautrock. They are such talented and open-minded musicians that it was very easy to suggest something and try it out, and when it worked, then we would just go with the flow.

They were also always very excited when I played something on a track too, and as soon as I would go to the keyboard or guitar, all their phones would immediately come out. I think ‘Fragment’ is a very listenable album. The club tracks work in a club environment, I know that because I have tried them out in my DJ sets, and the quieter tracks are to sit back and relax to.

So you’ve revived your label MFS to release ‘Fragment’?

Yes, I have decided to defrost MFS and bring it out of retirement, as I wanted the album to go to a good home and I wanted to be able to manage, to a degree, what happened to it, as the album has a lot of me in there too. So what better place than to release it on my own label?

Although I am not managing the band, I feel a necessity to guide and help them understand the mechanisms of the Western music industry. I wanted to give their music the best possible platform and by re-igniting MFS, I thought that in itself would be an interesting attraction too. I think this band deserve to be heard and seen. This is only the start.

You’ve been doing a few DJ sets at selected events, how are you finding this or do you prefer the live Q&As that you’ve done for ‘B-Movie (Lust & Sound in West-Berlin)’?

It’s all part of the job really, the Q&As are usually fun and hopefully informative, the DJing has just evolved out of that. As ‘B-Movie’ has now been accepted by the educational system and become part of the German school curriculum, I do quite a few Q&As over the year.

I used to get asked to show the film and then DJ at an 80s style after-party event, then it just became playing a DJ set, but I’m not your traditional techno DJ and I don’t play generic techno, or a load of lacklustre oldies. I only play the tracks and remixes that I have made or produced myself. That way I can usually test new stuff too and see what works and what doesn’t.

I never had the ambition to be a DJ, if I had I would have started decades ago, I simply see DJing as part of the event and it is actually quite fun too. Events are all different and as it’s usually never a straight techno event, I can just play whatever I want. I always try and take the crowd on a little journey though, and they get to hear tracks they might even know in their original form, but when I play, they are all remixed by me.

What’s next for you?

I have quite a few projects on the go at the moment, but I really don’t like to talk about things that are not finished. One thing is for certain, I won’t be making ‘E Movie’. My main focus right now, is getting the STOLEN album out at the end of September and working on the promotion and remixes. Everything else is top secret.


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to MARK REEDER

‘Mauerstadt’ is released in CD and double vinyl formats by Kennen, still available direct from http://www.mauerstadt.com/

STOLEN ‘Fragment’ co-produced by MARK REEDER is released by MFS, available from https://mfsberlin.com/

https://www.facebook.com/markreedermusic/

https://twitter.com/markreedermfs

https://www.instagram.com/markreeder.mfs/

https://www.facebook.com/strangeoldentertainment/


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
4th July 2018

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